I learned do not wedge a screw into my trigger and walk around with it, it's not safe.
Or don't let any gunk accumulate on any of the parts to induce any kind of trigger load at all because moving the slide will make it go off.
I learned do not wedge a screw into my trigger and walk around with it, it's not safe.
Or don't let any gunk accumulate on any of the parts to induce any kind of trigger load at all because moving the slide will make it go off.
When I saw the military was moving away from Beretta to this garbage, I laughed. All the stuff they claim is a selling point are just new points of failure. M9 and 1911 forever. Two best sidearms you could possibly use.
I have the civilian version of the M9 and I can say that it's one heck of a gun. It does however hate subpar ammo. It'll jam just looking at the bullet. But that's because I'm cheap.
Might want to have a gunsmith check the feed ramp and possibly the mags. All the M9's I've handled have been reliable to a fault. The only issue I can find is the harsh double action pull on the first shot. But you can train through that.
I truly think it's the ammo. I bought this this crappy stuff off Cabela's years ago. I think I got 1,200 rounds for $160. So you can just imagine how awful that was for the gun. And I agree with you it does surprise you when you send your first round downrange.
I love my 1911, and my Beretta 92FS, but I do carry my P320 more often. It is the first generation that had the heavy trigger shoe. I sent it in for the retrofit. I tried to reenact this with mine and could not. The trigger on the 320 was the best striker fired guns at the time, but with that comes some trade offs. MAKE SURE YOU HAVE A WELL FIT HOLSTER and you should be fine. When I carry my 1911 or my 92FS I carry them cocked and locked, and they have lighter triggers than any 320. But I can see why this could happen with the lowest bidder holsters and people of average intelligence.
The only good plastic gun Sig ever made is the SP2022.
(post is archived)